Showing posts with label Rigid Heddle Loom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rigid Heddle Loom. Show all posts

Saturday, March 14, 2015

The Great Personal Destash Challenge of 2015

There comes a time in (nearly) every crafter's life when they have to admit they have a problem. Mine time came about a week ago.

I've been wanting to use up some of my yarn stash and do some work with my rigid heddle loom but was short on inspiration.  So when someone mentioned Deborah Jarchow's class, Simply Stunning Scarves, on Craftsy, I signed up right away. I promised myself that I would  not buy any new yarns to do the class projects - surely I had enough already that I could easily find what was needed.

Wrong!  I had yarn stashed all over my studio, in closets, under tables - any place you could hide something, I had squirreled away a little (or a lot of) yarn.  I did find some lovely vintage handspun from Switzerland, and made the first scarf in the class (more on that at the end of this entry).  BTW - I highly recommend this class to rigid heddle beginners. 

When it came time to start the second scarf, I started the whole frustrating process of searching high and low again.  And quickly got fed up.  The result was that I collected my nine tubs (!) of yarn and all the bags and baskets hidden around the house and dumped them in the middle of my living room floor.


Here I have to confess three things:

1) this is after a major destash just last month.  I've already gone through my yarns and donated several cartons to my weaving class.  This is just the stuff I wasn't ready to part with.

2) this isn't all of it.  There are at least four or five different yarns I'm certain I still have hidden somewhere in the house - probably several skeins of each. 

3) this really isn't all of it.  I've deliberately excluded my sock yarn collection, my unspun fibers, and my handspun.  And the cones of yarn for machine knitting. Those are all problems for another time.

Phew, glad I got that off my chest.

So I thought I'd spend an hour or so sorting into neat little groups by texture.  I've already tried sorting by color and then by fiber content - neither method worked for me.  Six hours later, I had this:



In the process, I found half a dozen projects I've started in the last few years and lost track of.  They're now in buckets and baskets (about 9:00 in this photo) where they will remind me that they need attention. What you don't see here is the huge bag of yarn I culled out to donate to my weaving class.

Anyway, I put all the yarns tidily in their respective tubs, and was ready to get back to the business of weaving.  While sorting, I chose the yarn for my next scarf project, and actually got the loom warped.  Then decided I should probably find the yarn for the third scarf while I had all the tubs out.  And realized that I still had to go through every single tub to find what I wanted.

I bit the bullet, and have spent all of my spare time this past week updating my stash on Ravelry.  Every skein of yarn I own (with the exceptions confessed above) is now listed on my stash page with a photo.  This comprises 592.5 skeins of 221 different varieties or colorways of yarns weighing just over 105 pounds.  Egad!   This afternoon I finally finished and now have my tubs neatly put away on top of the bookshelves in my studio like so:



Each tub is labeled with the type or purpose of the yarn, and the date it was last sorted through.  Wonder if I'll be able to maintain this?








So here's the challenge part of this post.   I have promised myself that I will not buy any new yarn for the next six months.  Ok, so I originally promised myself no new yarn for a year, but who am I kidding?  I think I can make it for six months.  Or maybe three.  In the meantime, I will try to use up at least a quarter of the stash. That's 25 pounds of yarn in six months.  This could be either by finishing projects of my own, or sharing with one of my sisters, who has just begun her transformation to the darkside.  (She ordered her loomette last week  and I'm seeing a rigid heddle loom in her future,  mwa-ha-ha.)

To shame myself into completing some projects I started and set aside, here's what I've already committed to finishing:





A triangle shawl.  I finished the weaving part a couple of weeks ago but still need to finish the long edge and add the fringe.

The unused yarn for this project is not included in my stash.  Make that 106 pounds.









Another triangle shawl.  This is made with Lion Brand Homespun, which I will never, ever use again.  Any ends that aren't tied off unravel spontaneously.  Yuck.  I'll be looking for a crochet edging pattern to finish this one off.






A ribbed keyhole scarf using a pattern found on Ravelry. 







And a second scarf using the same pattern and chunky yarn.  How I came to start the same pattern twice, I have no clue.


The Bella Lana Reversible Cable Scarf, another pattern found on Ravelry.

 I’ve wanted to learn to knit cables for ages. I started and re-started this scarf half a dozen times before I put it on the shelf ‘temporarily.’ Unfortunately I think I gave away the other skein of yarn I had reserved for this scarf in my destash of February 2015. Guess I’ll be starting it again in a different yarn because I still do want to conquer cables.






The "Crammed and Spaced" scarf currently on my rigid heddle loom. 

















And a few projects waiting in the wings:





Planning to use this fun eyelash yarn on my Spriggs adjustable rectangle loom.  I actually started it a couple of years ago but made a mistake right at the beginning that I discovered after  weaving about 15 rounds.  Couldn't figure out how to fix without frogging the whole thing.  Which I finally did last week.




I was given this bag of gorgeous Chinese red yarn and discovered last week that a warp had already been cut from some of it. Looks to be about right for the length and width of a scarf, so I'll do this as a project in weaving class. Thinking about whether to just do a simple tabby or if it wants a twill tie-up.


I took a class in December 2013 on making Felfs - got as far as knitting my test swatch and dropped the ball. Will have to start over testing because I have no clue what happened to my first test and notes…

I think one skein should be enough to make one pair but I bought a second skein just to be safe.




And just to prove that I can actually finish something I start:

This is the open weave felted scarf from the Deborah Jarchow class I mentioned earlier.  I warped it on a Wednesday night and had it felted by Saturday night.  Note - the color looks different in each of the photos - this is due to my poor photography and not changes to the yarn.  The photo of the finished scarf is closest to the actual color of the yarn. 



This is the tag from the yarn I used.  It's part of the stash I was given when I bought my Gilmore loom from an estate.  Despite being handspun, it worked beautifully for both warp and weft and I didn't have a single break.




Project on the loom.  The purple strips are scrap-booking paper cut to 1" widths used for spacers.















The scarf after twisting and knotting the fringe, but before felting.
































And (tada!) the scarf after felting. Since my washer is front-loading, it can't be used for felting.  I used a little countertop washer and checked the scarf every 2-3 minutes.  It took 21 minutes to reach this point.




Monday, June 4, 2012

Major Sulking, and a Little Progress

I'm coming out of a major sulk.  After a seriously fun day Friday receiving and assembling the little Mountain Loom, everything went to pot.   I went to the Friday night dance feeling great and ready to kick up my heels.  Danced one set and sat down to relax.  Within a few minutes I had a sore throat, headache, and no energy.  Finally excused myself and went home hoping it was allergies and not a cold.

Got up Saturday morning feeling even worse, but still held out hope that if I "rested" and took antihistamines, I'd shape up right away.  Finally gave in and canceled plans to attend my guild meeting and a dinner date George and I had with friends.  And pretty much slept the day away.  Poor Tallulah tried to be patient but by evening she needed to play -- and I just didn't have the oomph to amuse her.

Sunday morning woke up feeling even worse, and decided to take Tallulah to Yorkie Camp for an overnight visit.  Best thing I could have done for both of us.  She got to play with her little pals, and I got to sleep most of the day.

So three days, a quart of soup, and 8 popsicles later, I'm beginning to feel human again.  But still sulking about losing the whole weekend.  I really resent that I can't just keep going the way I used to.  Why is it that you don't really value your time until you start to realize that it's a limited commodity?

It wasn't a total loss.  During my conscious moments I did some knitting on the Moonlight Mohair stole/shawl.  In fact, I actually finished it this afternoon.  While knitting the last two feet, I kept wrapping it around my shoulders, waiting for it to drape the way I had in mind.  Finally realized this afternoon that it's not going to drape.  Sigh.  It has just a little too much substance.  So I finished it off at 92" in length.  Even though it's not what I imagined, I'm still pretty happy with it.



 I'm especially happy that it doesn't have the greenish haze I was beginning to see.  Now I just need an occasion to wear it.

The brooch at the shoulder is a hammered copper piece made by one of my Wednesday evening classmates, Brenda.  She has a business called "Designs By Brenda" and specializes in Celtic inspired jewelry.  I bought this Celtic dog brooch from her a few months ago.  I just love the intricate knots in this piece.


 So I'm ready to stop sulking, retrieve my dog from camp, get back to the office, and get some weaving done.  Need to order some yarn for my Krokbragd/Rosepath project warp.  In the meantime, I'm going to work on the apricot-colored scarf on the rigid heddle loom.  Here's a preview.




All of the materials came from a  Newton's Yarn Country sale.  I'm using a smooth warp thread  - the only label on the cone is "#3445 Peach."  The warp is a corkscrew yarn with irregular (both in size and location) slubs.  No info on the skein wrappers whatsoever.


 I love how the slubs make the woven fabric irregular and more 3-dimensional.  Although most of the time I would be having fits if the weave was not even, it's kinda fun to do this intentionally!